|
ABSTRACT
Genes,
coded in DNA, carry our hereditary information. Today, these insights
are leading to diagnoses and treatments of genetic diseases.
According to the National Human Genome Research Institute, National
Institutes of Health, “We will soon know the sequence of all
human genes. However, the identification and evaluation of human
gene variants important to health has not kept pace. Likewise, our
ability to deduce the function of novel genes remains limited.”
Genetic research has established that perturbations of the metabolic
pathways involving organic substances can account for a large fraction
of defects in humans, such as neural tube defects. The genes making
up these metabolic pathways are logical candidates for putative
targeted genes.
Genetic researchers are currently scrambling to identify human genetic
variants in genes comprising these metabolic pathways. There are
one hundred trillion cells in an adult body, which include bacterial
cells that possess their own genomes. To store this raw information
in our cells would require 30 trillion CD's.
Changes
in the bases of a gene are known as mutations, which cause
genetic diseases. Mutations in genetic code occur as relatively
minor changes with major health results, such as the single-base
substitution in sickle cell anemia.
|